On the campus of St. Albans there is this rich and purple light. There is this calm.
Yesterday morning, I talked with Annie Scholl for close to an hour by phone. Annie, a writer and photographer, is an interviewing pro. She asked questions I sometimes found difficult to answer. I was glad, in the end, to be pressed, for I knew that, with Annie, I was heard.
There are—make no mistake—deep frustrations that attend this writing life. I don't always successfully rise above them. I can sink to confusion and also to despair. I can wonder why, and also, why not? I can grow confounded.
But I'm happiest and more whole when I climb to whatever elevation is required to gain the broader view.
We talked about all of that. A fraction of that conversation is here now, on Huffington Post.
The final question is below:
You're not openly seeking to be a popular writer and make millions, but if that were to happen, how would you feel about it?
I actually think it's a scary thing to be in the glare and blare of the spotlight. I feel very lucky to have the life I have. I'm able to publish books that matter to me. I am not in the cross fire of envy. I am, in the end, enormously grateful for what I have. My ambition is to do well enough to be allowed to publish again. To remain rooted in the work. To participate in the literary conversation. Small ambitions. A fulfilled existence.
0 Comments on On Why Living a 'Small Life' Is Big, interviewed by Annie Scholl, on HuffPo as of 4/16/2015 8:41:00 PM
Add a Comment